228100 N, Tomando El Camino De Los Conucos Hasta El Entronque
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Tampa Bay Benthic Monitoring Program: Status of Middle Tampa Bay: 1993-1998
Tampa Bay Benthic Monitoring Program: Status of Middle Tampa Bay: 1993-1998 Stephen A. Grabe Environmental Supervisor David J. Karlen Environmental Scientist II Christina M. Holden Environmental Scientist I Barbara Goetting Environmental Specialist I Thomas Dix Environmental Scientist II MARCH 2003 1 Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County Richard Garrity, Ph.D. Executive Director Gerold Morrison, Ph.D. Director, Environmental Resources Management Division 2 INTRODUCTION The Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County (EPCHC) has been collecting samples in Middle Tampa Bay 1993 as part of the bay-wide benthic monitoring program developed to (Tampa Bay National Estuary Program 1996). The original objectives of this program were to discern the ―health‖—or ―status‖-- of the bay’s sediments by developing a Benthic Index for Tampa Bay as well as evaluating sediment quality by means of Sediment Quality Assessment Guidelines (SQAGs). The Tampa Bay Estuary Program provided partial support for this monitoring. This report summarizes data collected during 1993-1998 from the Middle Tampa Bay segment of Tampa Bay. 3 METHODS Field Collection and Laboratory Procedures: A total of 127 stations (20 to 24 per year) were sampled during late summer/early fall ―Index Period‖ 1993-1998 (Appendix A). Sample locations were randomly selected from computer- generated coordinates. Benthic samples were collected using a Young grab sampler following the field protocols outlined in Courtney et al. (1993). Laboratory procedures followed the protocols set forth in Courtney et al. (1995). Data Analysis: Species richness, Shannon-Wiener diversity, and Evenness were calculated using PISCES Conservation Ltd.’s (2001) ―Species Diversity and Richness II‖ software. -
Marine Ecology Progress Series 464:135
Vol. 464: 135–151, 2012 MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES Published September 19 doi: 10.3354/meps09872 Mar Ecol Prog Ser Physical and biological factors affect the vertical distribution of larvae of benthic gastropods in a shallow embayment Michelle J. Lloyd1,*, Anna Metaxas1, Brad deYoung2 1Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4R2 2Department of Physics and Physical Oceanography, Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada A1B 3X7 ABSTRACT: Marine gastropods form a diverse taxonomic group, yet little is known about the factors that affect their larval distribution and abundance. We investigated the larval vertical dis- tribution and abundance of 9 meroplanktonic gastropod taxa (Margarites spp., Crepidula spp., Astyris lunata, Diaphana minuta, Littorinimorpha, Arrhoges occidentalis, Ilyanassa spp., Bittiolum alternatum and Nudibranchia), with similar morphology and swimming abilities, but different adult habitats and life-history strategies. We explored the role of physical (temperature, salinity, density, current velocities) and biological (fluorescence) factors, as well as periodic cycles (lunar phase, tidal state, diel period) in regulating larval vertical distribution. Using a pump, we collected plankton samples at 6 depths (3, 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24 m) at each tidal state, every 2 h over a 36 and a 26 h period, during a spring and neap tide, respectively, in St. George’s Bay, Nova Scotia. Con- currently, we measured temperature, salinity, density, fluorescence (as a proxy for chlorophyll, i.e. phytoplankton density), and current velocity. Larval abundance was most strongly related to tem- perature, except for Littorinimorpha and Crepidula spp., for which it was most strongly related to fluorescence. Margarites spp., A. -
(Approx) Mixed Micro Shells (22G Bags) Philippines € 10,00 £8,64 $11,69 Each 22G Bag Provides Hours of Fun; Some Interesting Foraminifera Also Included
Special Price £ US$ Family Genus, species Country Quality Size Remarks w/o Photo Date added Category characteristic (€) (approx) (approx) Mixed micro shells (22g bags) Philippines € 10,00 £8,64 $11,69 Each 22g bag provides hours of fun; some interesting Foraminifera also included. 17/06/21 Mixed micro shells Ischnochitonidae Callistochiton pulchrior Panama F+++ 89mm € 1,80 £1,55 $2,10 21/12/16 Polyplacophora Ischnochitonidae Chaetopleura lurida Panama F+++ 2022mm € 3,00 £2,59 $3,51 Hairy girdles, beautifully preserved. Web 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Ischnochitonidae Ischnochiton textilis South Africa F+++ 30mm+ € 4,00 £3,45 $4,68 30/04/21 Polyplacophora Ischnochitonidae Ischnochiton textilis South Africa F+++ 27.9mm € 2,80 £2,42 $3,27 30/04/21 Polyplacophora Ischnochitonidae Stenoplax limaciformis Panama F+++ 16mm+ € 6,50 £5,61 $7,60 Uncommon. 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Acanthopleura gemmata Philippines F+++ 25mm+ € 2,50 £2,16 $2,92 Hairy margins, beautifully preserved. 04/08/17 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Acanthopleura gemmata Australia F+++ 25mm+ € 2,60 £2,25 $3,04 02/06/18 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Acanthopleura granulata Panama F+++ 41mm+ € 4,00 £3,45 $4,68 West Indian 'fuzzy' chiton. Web 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Acanthopleura granulata Panama F+++ 32mm+ € 3,00 £2,59 $3,51 West Indian 'fuzzy' chiton. 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Chiton tuberculatus Panama F+++ 44mm+ € 5,00 £4,32 $5,85 Caribbean. 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Chiton tuberculatus Panama F++ 35mm € 2,50 £2,16 $2,92 Caribbean. 24/12/16 Polyplacophora Chitonidae Chiton tuberculatus Panama F+++ 29mm+ € 3,00 £2,59 $3,51 Caribbean. -
Molluscs (Mollusca: Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polyplacophora)
Gulf of Mexico Science Volume 34 Article 4 Number 1 Number 1/2 (Combined Issue) 2018 Molluscs (Mollusca: Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polyplacophora) of Laguna Madre, Tamaulipas, Mexico: Spatial and Temporal Distribution Martha Reguero Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Andrea Raz-Guzmán Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México DOI: 10.18785/goms.3401.04 Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/goms Recommended Citation Reguero, M. and A. Raz-Guzmán. 2018. Molluscs (Mollusca: Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polyplacophora) of Laguna Madre, Tamaulipas, Mexico: Spatial and Temporal Distribution. Gulf of Mexico Science 34 (1). Retrieved from https://aquila.usm.edu/goms/vol34/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Gulf of Mexico Science by an authorized editor of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Reguero and Raz-Guzmán: Molluscs (Mollusca: Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polyplacophora) of Lagu Gulf of Mexico Science, 2018(1), pp. 32–55 Molluscs (Mollusca: Gastropoda, Bivalvia, Polyplacophora) of Laguna Madre, Tamaulipas, Mexico: Spatial and Temporal Distribution MARTHA REGUERO AND ANDREA RAZ-GUZMA´ N Molluscs were collected in Laguna Madre from seagrass beds, macroalgae, and bare substrates with a Renfro beam net and an otter trawl. The species list includes 96 species and 48 families. Six species are dominant (Bittiolum varium, Costoanachis semiplicata, Brachidontes exustus, Crassostrea virginica, Chione cancellata, and Mulinia lateralis) and 25 are commercially important (e.g., Strombus alatus, Busycoarctum coarctatum, Triplofusus giganteus, Anadara transversa, Noetia ponderosa, Brachidontes exustus, Crassostrea virginica, Argopecten irradians, Argopecten gibbus, Chione cancellata, Mercenaria campechiensis, and Rangia flexuosa). -
Malacofauna Marina Del Parque Nacional “Los Caimanes”, Villa Clara, Cuba
Tesis de Diploma Malacofauna Marina del Parque Nacional “Los Caimanes”, Villa Clara, Cuba. Autora: Liliana Olga Quesada Pérez Junio, 2011 Universidad Central “Marta Abreu” de Las Villas Facultad Ciencias Agropecuaria TESIS DE DIPLOMA Malacofauna marina del Parque Nacional “Los Caimanes”, Villa Clara, Cuba. Autora: Liliana Olga Quesada Pérez Tutor: M. C. Ángel Quirós Espinosa Investigador Auxiliar y Profesor Auxiliar [email protected] Centro de Estudios y Servicios Ambientales, CITMA-Villa Clara Carretera Central 716, Santa Clara Consultante: Dr.C. José Espinosa Sáez Investigador Titular Instituto de Oceanología Junio, 2011 Pensamiento “La diferencia entre una mala observación y una buena, es que la primera es errónea y la segunda es incompleta.” Van Hise Dedicatoria Dedicatoria: A mis padres, a Yandy y a mi familia: por las innumerables razones que me dan para vivir, y por ser fuente de inspiración para mis metas. Agradecimientos Agradecimientos: Muchos son los que de alguna forma contribuyeron a la realización de este trabajo, todos saben cuánto les agradezco: Primero quiero agradecer a mis padres, que aunque no estén presentes sé que de una forma u otra siempre estuvieron allí para darme todo su amor y apoyo. A mi familia en general: a mi abuela, hermano, a mis tíos por toda su ayuda y comprensión. A Yandy y a su familia que han estado allí frente a mis dificultades. Agradecer a mi tutor el M.Sc. Ángel Quirós, a mi consultante el Dr.C. José Espinosa y a la Dra.C. María Elena, por su dedicación para el logro de esta tesis. A mis compañeros de grupo por estos cinco años que hemos compartidos juntos, que para mí fueron inolvidables. -
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: PATTERNS IN
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: PATTERNS IN DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF BENTHIC MOLLUSCS ALONG A DEPTH GRADIENT IN THE BAHAMAS Michael Joseph Dowgiallo, Doctor of Philosophy, 2004 Dissertation directed by: Professor Marjorie L. Reaka-Kudla Department of Biology, UMCP Species richness and abundance of benthic bivalve and gastropod molluscs was determined over a depth gradient of 5 - 244 m at Lee Stocking Island, Bahamas by deploying replicate benthic collectors at five sites at 5 m, 14 m, 46 m, 153 m, and 244 m for six months beginning in December 1993. A total of 773 individual molluscs comprising at least 72 taxa were retrieved from the collectors. Analysis of the molluscan fauna that colonized the collectors showed overwhelmingly higher abundance and diversity at the 5 m, 14 m, and 46 m sites as compared to the deeper sites at 153 m and 244 m. Irradiance, temperature, and habitat heterogeneity all declined with depth, coincident with declines in the abundance and diversity of the molluscs. Herbivorous modes of feeding predominated (52%) and carnivorous modes of feeding were common (44%) over the range of depths studied at Lee Stocking Island, but mode of feeding did not change significantly over depth. One bivalve and one gastropod species showed a significant decline in body size with increasing depth. Analysis of data for 960 species of gastropod molluscs from the Western Atlantic Gastropod Database of the Academy of Natural Sciences (ANS) that have ranges including the Bahamas showed a positive correlation between body size of species of gastropods and their geographic ranges. There was also a positive correlation between depth range and the size of the geographic range. -
Molluscan Subfossil Assemblages Reveal the Long-Term Deterioration of Coral Reef Environments in Caribbean Panama ⇑ Katie L
Marine Pollution Bulletin xxx (2015) xxx–xxx Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Marine Pollution Bulletin journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/marpolbul Molluscan subfossil assemblages reveal the long-term deterioration of coral reef environments in Caribbean Panama ⇑ Katie L. Cramer a,b, , Jill S. Leonard-Pingel c, Félix Rodríguez a, Jeremy B.C. Jackson b,a,d a Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama b Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0244, United States c Washington and Lee University, Rm 123 Science Addition, Lexington, VA 24450, United States d Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20013, United States article info abstract Article history: Caribbean reef corals have declined sharply since the 1980s, but the lack of prior baseline data has hin- Received 24 February 2015 dered identification of drivers of change. To assess anthropogenic change in reef environments over the Revised 9 May 2015 past century, we tracked the composition of subfossil assemblages of bivalve and gastropod mollusks Accepted 12 May 2015 excavated from pits below lagoonal and offshore reefs in Bocas del Toro, Panama. The higher prevalence Available online xxxx of (a) infaunal suspension-feeding bivalves and herbivorous and omnivorous gastropods in lagoons and (b) epifaunal and suspension-feeding bivalves and carnivorous and suspension-feeding gastropods off- Keywords: shore reflected the greater influence of land-based nutrients/sediments within lagoons. Temporal Barbatia cancellaria changes indicated deteriorating environmental conditions pre-1960 in lagoons and post-1960 offshore, Bocas del Toro Dendostrea frons with offshore communities becoming more similar to lagoonal ones since 1960. -
The Journal of Molluscan Studies
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/mollus/issue/55/1 by guest on 30 September 2021 The Journal of Molluscan Studies Edited by J. Taylor INDEX FOR VOLUME 55 1989 Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/mollus/issue/55/1 by guest on 30 September 2021 Contents for Volume 55, 1989 Journal of Molluscan Studies VOLUME 55, 1989 Part 1, pp. 1-147 (published 3 March 1989) Part 2, pp. 149-311 (published 10 May 1989) Part 3, pp. 313-^*29 (published 10 August 1989) Part 4, pp. 431-553 (published 1 November 1989) CONTENTS page AGUIRRE, A., see VICARIO et al. ALLANSON, B.R., see VILLIERS & ALLANSON Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/mollus/issue/55/1 by guest on 30 September 2021 BAILEY, S.E.R. Foraging behaviour of terrestrial gastropods: integrating field and labora- tory studies 263 BARKAI, A. & BRANCH, G.M. Growth and mortality of the mussels Choromytilus meridionalis (Krauss) and Aulacomya ater (Molina) as indicators of biotic conditions 329 BAUR, B. Growth and reproduction of the minute land snail Punctum pygmaeum (Drapamaud) 383 BERNARD, R.T.F., see HODGSON & BERNARD BERRY, A.J. Spawning season and egg production in Forth estuary Retusa obtusa (Opisthobranchia: Retusidae) 455 BODE, A. Production of the intertidal chiton Acanlhochitona crinita within a community of CoraUina tlongato (Rhodophyta) 37 BOUCHET, P. A review of poecilogony in gastropods 67 BOUKRAA, A., see GOMOT et al. BRANCH, G.M., see BARKAI & BRANCH BRONMARK, C. Interactions between epiphytes, macrophytes and freshwater snails: a review 299 BROWN, A.C., see TRUEMAN & BROWN BROWN, A.C., see VAN W1JK et al. -
Compensatory Effects of Boat Wake and Dredge Spoil Disposal on Assemblages of Macroinvertebrates
Compensatory Effects of Boat Wake and Dredge Spoil Disposal on Assemblages of Macroinvertebrates MELANIE J. BISHOP* Centre for Research on Ecological Impacts of Coastal Cities, Marine Ecology Laboratories, A11, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia ABSTRACT: Estuarine assemblages are exposed to multiple disturbances that overlap in time and space. Along the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway (east coast, United States), two disturbances that frequently co-occur are the production of wake by boats and the disposal of sediment dredged from boat channels. Boat wake generally coarsens sediments by eroding finer particles while deposition of dredge spoil decreases mean grain size. If previously demonstrated effects of boat wake on infauna are due to coarsening of grain size, deposition of dredge spoil on wake affected sites may, through compensatory effects, prevent an effect of wake from being detected. Epifaunal assemblages associated with seagrass blades that are more likely to be structured by hydrodynamic forces than granulometry may instead be affected by boat wake irrespective of the previous deposition of fine materials. To test these hypotheses, infauna and epifauna were sampled in patchy seagrass habitat at sites with and without boat wake that were affected by historic deposition of dredge spoil and at sites without wake that had not received dredge spoil. Sediment granulometry and infaunal assemblages differed between sites with and without dredge spoil but not between spoil affected sites differing in exposure to wake. Epifaunal assemblages differed between sites with and without wake irrespective of sediment granulometry. The effect of wake on epifauna was primarily due to lesser abundances of the gastropod Bittiolum varium and the slipper limpet, Crepidula fornicata, at wake exposed sites. -
Malacologia, 1993, 35(2); 261-313
^;^2_ MALACOLOGIA, 1993, 35(2); 261-313 PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS AND GENERIC REVIEW OF THE BITTIINAE (PROSOBRANCHIA: GERITHIOIDEA) Richard S. Houbrick Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560, U.S.A. ABSTRACT The anatomy of seven members of the Bittium group is described, clarifying the status of the genus-level taxa comprising it. Bittium reticulatum, the type species of Bittium Gray, is described in depth, thereby establishing criteria for comparisons with other taxa of Bitliinae. The type species of Stylidium Dell and LirobiWum Bartsch, and representatives of Bittiolum Cossmann and Cacozeliana Strand are examined and compared with Bittium, s.s. Results of anatomical studies and a phylogenetic analysis using the Hennig86 and CLADOS programs, with Cehtt)ium as an outgroup, establish monophyly for Bitliinae Cossmann and reveal six different genus-level taxa. A new genus, ittibittium, from the Indo-Pacific, is proposed. Synonymies of each genus- level taxon and representative species examined are presented. Brief accounts of the ecology and zoogeography of each taxon are given. Two taxa formerly attributed to the 6/ff/um-group are herein excluded from it and referred to Cerithium Bruguière. These are Cerithium zebrum Kiener, 1841, and Cerithium boeticum Pease, 1861. The subfamily Bittiinae Cossmann, 1906, is thought to comprise nine genera (four of which were not included in phylogenetic analyses) : Bittium Gray, 1847; Bittiolum Cossmann, 1906; Ittibittium gen. n., Stylidium Dalí, 1907; Lirobit- tium Bartsch, 1911 ; Cacozeliana Strand, 1928; Argyropeza Melvill & Standen, 1901 ; Varicopeza Gründel, 1976; Zebittium Finlay, 1927. The genus Cassiella Gofas, 1987, of uncertain place- ment, is included as a possible member of the group. -
Resistant Pseudosuccinea Columella Snails to Fasciola Hepatica (Trematoda) Infection in Cuba : Ecological, Molecular and Phenotypical Aspects Annia Alba Menendez
Comparative biology of susceptible and naturally- resistant Pseudosuccinea columella snails to Fasciola hepatica (Trematoda) infection in Cuba : ecological, molecular and phenotypical aspects Annia Alba Menendez To cite this version: Annia Alba Menendez. Comparative biology of susceptible and naturally- resistant Pseudosuccinea columella snails to Fasciola hepatica (Trematoda) infection in Cuba : ecological, molecular and phe- notypical aspects. Parasitology. Université de Perpignan; Instituto Pedro Kouri (La Havane, Cuba), 2018. English. NNT : 2018PERP0055. tel-02133876 HAL Id: tel-02133876 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-02133876 Submitted on 20 May 2019 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Délivré par UNIVERSITE DE PERPIGNAN VIA DOMITIA En co-tutelle avec Instituto “Pedro Kourí” de Medicina Tropical Préparée au sein de l’ED305 Energie Environnement Et des unités de recherche : IHPE UMR 5244 / Laboratorio de Malacología Spécialité : Biologie Présentée par Annia ALBA MENENDEZ Comparative biology of susceptible and naturally- resistant Pseudosuccinea columella snails to Fasciola hepatica (Trematoda) infection in Cuba: ecological, molecular and phenotypical aspects Soutenue le 12 décembre 2018 devant le jury composé de Mme. Christine COUSTAU, Rapporteur Directeur de Recherche CNRS, INRA Sophia Antipolis M. Philippe JARNE, Rapporteur Directeur de recherche CNRS, CEFE, Montpellier Mme. -
Florida Keys Species List
FKNMS Species List A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T 1 Marine and Terrestrial Species of the Florida Keys 2 Phylum Subphylum Class Subclass Order Suborder Infraorder Superfamily Family Scientific Name Common Name Notes 3 1 Porifera (Sponges) Demospongia Dictyoceratida Spongiidae Euryspongia rosea species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey 4 2 Fasciospongia cerebriformis species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey 5 3 Hippospongia gossypina Velvet sponge 6 4 Hippospongia lachne Sheepswool sponge 7 5 Oligoceras violacea Tortugas survey, Wheaton list 8 6 Spongia barbara Yellow sponge 9 7 Spongia graminea Glove sponge 10 8 Spongia obscura Grass sponge 11 9 Spongia sterea Wire sponge 12 10 Irciniidae Ircinia campana Vase sponge 13 11 Ircinia felix Stinker sponge 14 12 Ircinia cf. Ramosa species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey 15 13 Ircinia strobilina Black-ball sponge 16 14 Smenospongia aurea species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey, Tortugas survey, Wheaton list 17 15 Thorecta horridus recorded from Keys by Wiedenmayer 18 16 Dendroceratida Dysideidae Dysidea etheria species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey; Tortugas survey, Wheaton list 19 17 Dysidea fragilis species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey; Tortugas survey, Wheaton list 20 18 Dysidea janiae species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey; Tortugas survey, Wheaton list 21 19 Dysidea variabilis species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey 22 20 Verongida Druinellidae Pseudoceratina crassa Branching tube sponge 23 21 Aplysinidae Aplysina archeri species from G.P. Schmahl, BNP survey 24 22 Aplysina cauliformis Row pore rope sponge 25 23 Aplysina fistularis Yellow tube sponge 26 24 Aplysina lacunosa 27 25 Verongula rigida Pitted sponge 28 26 Darwinellidae Aplysilla sulfurea species from G.P.